💥 Gate Square Event: #PostToWinCGN 💥
Post original content on Gate Square related to CGN, Launchpool, or CandyDrop, and get a chance to share 1,333 CGN rewards!
📅 Event Period: Oct 24, 2025, 10:00 – Nov 4, 2025, 16:00 UTC
📌 Related Campaigns:
Launchpool 👉 https://www.gate.com/announcements/article/47771
CandyDrop 👉 https://www.gate.com/announcements/article/47763
📌 How to Participate:
1️⃣ Post original content related to CGN or one of the above campaigns (Launchpool / CandyDrop).
2️⃣ Content must be at least 80 words.
3️⃣ Add the hashtag #PostToWinCGN
4️⃣ Include a screenshot s
#巨鲸动向 crypto world years of experience have made me deeply aware of a phenomenon: those who appear "smart" often end up in a worrying situation.
They have strong analytical skills, clear logical thinking, are well-informed, and are skilled at making calls, yet at critical moments, they lose their accounts due to not being able to maintain their composure. In contrast, those investors who seem "slow" become increasingly steady; after each round of market fluctuations, they calmly calculate their profits without ever panicking.
The market can actually be divided into two types of participants:
One type is ordinary retail investors, who always buy high and sell low, being led by their own emotions.
Another type is like an "ATM", moving slowly like an old monk in meditation, with few transactions but each one very precise. The core difference between these two types of people lies in their ability to control emotions.
The so-called "smart people" stare at the candlestick charts all day, fantasizing about "if only I could catch this wave of market movement"; while "foolish people" only focus on their account curve, with the belief in their hearts of "don't get liquidated, live longer."
"Smart people" invest heavily when they are bullish and cut losses immediately when they are bearish; "Foolish people" remain restrained during an uptrend and do not panic during a downtrend.
I have witnessed too many tragedies of smart people:
They can talk confidently about the macro situation, yet they cannot remain calm during a sharp decline; they can predict the market rhythm over a longer period, but they crumble in front of consecutive bearish candles.
In the crypto world, what truly matters is not the level of intelligence, but the ability to "endure."
"Smart people" act quickly, make money fast, and lose even faster; "foolish people" move slowly, their gains are not substantial, but they can gradually accumulate wealth.
Capital always flows to those who know how to "play dumb"—they don't chase high prices, don't panic sell, and only do what needs to be done.
Someone asked me how to become a "fool", actually the method is very simple:
No matter how hot the market is, don't go all in.
When you can't see the situation clearly, just stay in cash.
As long as the account exists, the opportunity will always be there.
The problem is not that you are not acting quickly enough, but that you are blindly running in the dark.
The light is always there; as long as your account exists, the path forward will always be there.